Tag Page StolenScience

#StolenScience
LataraSpeaksTruth

People usually talk about the Gullah Geechee in terms of culture…language, food, music, traditions. That matters, but it skips the most important question. Why were these specific Africans brought to the Lowcountry in the first place. The land answers that question. The coastal South was not easy land. It was tidal, swampy, mosquito-heavy, flooded half the year, and unpredictable. European settlers did not understand how to control wetlands at scale. They wanted rice profits, but they did not know how to make that environment productive. Rice is not a simple crop. It requires controlled flooding, precise drainage, knowledge of soil salinity, and timing tied to tides, not just seasons. So they did not look for random labor. They looked for expertise. Africans from rice-growing regions of West and Central Africa already knew how to work wetlands. They understood tidal irrigation, flood control, and crop cycles that Europeans had no experience with. This knowledge was not theoretical. It was lived, practiced, and proven long before the Carolina coast was ever mapped. This is why the ancestors of what we now call the Gullah Geechee people were targeted. Not because they were strong. Not because they were replaceable. But because they carried knowledge Europeans needed and did not possess. This was not accidental migration. It was a forced transfer of skill. When rice plantations began producing massive yields in land Europeans later claimed was “tamed,” the real question was never how the land changed. The question was who already knew how to work it. That is where the story actually begins. #StolenScience #GullahGeechee #HiddenHistory #Lowcountry #UntoldHistory

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